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Astronomers have finally solved the mystery of how galaxy-killing winds formed in the early universe
These fierce winds strip away star-forming gas, pushing early galaxies to the brink of death.
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JWST discovers 'galaxy-killing' wind may explain why some early galaxies lived fast and died young
Powerful outflows of gas may explain why so many massive galaxies shut down star formation soon after the Big Bang.
A massive galaxy in the early universe seems to be growing itself toward ruin. While it churns out new stars at a furious ...
It could explain why the early universe is littered with dead realms. The post Scientists Discover Fearsome Wind That ...
If a galaxy runs out of gas, it will stop forming stars and die. Present-day galaxies have had more than 10 billion years to ...
Astronomers have discovered a "galaxy-killing wind" that may explain why there are far more massive "dead" galaxies than ...
Looking ahead: Future Euclid observations will enable scientists to watch how galaxy collisions spark bursts of star formation, fuel shrouded black holes, and unleash energetic feedback. According to ...
Scientists have long thought the Milky Way galaxy would someday collide with its closest neighbor, Andromeda. However, new research suggests the future of our cosmic home is more uncertain than ...
Using early data from the European Space Agency’s Euclid space telescope, astronomers have analyzed over one million galaxies to test a long-standing idea in astrophysics: that galaxy mergers help ...
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